Radiology
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One hundred ten patients with various focal liver lesions were imaged with a multisection fast low-angle shot (FLASH) gradient-echo sequence with an echo time of 4.6 msec. This sequence enabled the acquisition of 19 T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images of the liver within a single 26-second breath hold. Patients were also examined with standard T1- and T2-weighted spin-echo (SE) sequences. ⋯ Motion artifacts were reduced with the multisection FLASH sequence compared with both SE sequences (P less than .01). The overall image quality of the multisection FLASH images was similar to that of the T1-weighted SE images and superior to that of T2-weighted SE images. The most important characteristics of the multisection FLASH technique in MR imaging of the liver are the high T1 contrast, the prevention of motion artifacts, and a dramatic reduction in imaging time.
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Pneumothorax was induced in cadavers to determine the effects of patient positioning and imaging modality (conventional screen-film and computed radiography) on radiographic findings. Chest radiography, with cadavers in the supine frontal, erect frontal, and left lateral decubitus positions, was performed at baseline and after injection of incremental quantities of air into the pleural space. Five radiologists independently interpreted each radiograph. ⋯ Overall, the left lateral decubitus view was most sensitive (88%) for diagnosis of pneumothorax, followed by the erect (59%) and supine (37%) views. Receiver operating characteristic curves and multiple repeated measures analysis of variance revealed no statistically significant difference between diagnostic proficiency with conventional screen-film radiography and that with computed radiography. The authors conclude that the lateral decubitus view is superior to the erect and supine views for pneumothorax detection and that conventional and computed radiography perform similarly in pneumothorax detection.
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The proximal lumbar spinal nerve is composed of a group of small fascicles interspersed with fat. These fascicles converge into the ventral ramus. ⋯ The ventral ramus appears as a pair of oval, contiguous, small homogeneous structures. The evaluation of nerve compression may be aided by identification of the fascicles and ventral rami on CT and MR images.